C
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The claim is a
testable statement or conclusion that answers the original question. This is what the scientist is making an
argument for.
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E
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The evidence is
the scientific evidence that supports the claim. Evidence must be both appropriate
and sufficient to support the claim.
Ø
Appropriate evidence
– evidence must directly connect to the claim.
Ø
Sufficient evidence
– there must be enough evidence to draw a valid conclusion about whether the
claim is supported or not supported.
(Does the evidence – the data—you present support the
claim you are making?)
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R
|
Reasoning
is a justification that shows why the data counts as evidence to support the
claim and includes appropriate scientific principles. You
explain exactly how and why your evidence supports your
claim.
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R
|
When explaining phenomena, there can be more than one
possible claim or explanation. Often the same data can be used to more than
one claim. You should learn to recognize alternative explanations.
A good answer takes different possible explanations into
consideration and offers a rebuttal to
why a different explanation is not appropriate. In other words, the rebuttal
explains why a different claim is not appropriate. It also gives you another
chance to explain your reasoning and lets the reader know that you know what
you’re talking about!
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As you develop as a scientist, your
ability to make claims, cite evidence, use reasoning and offer rebuttals will
get much stronger and more sophisticated.
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